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Rollup withdrawals: 1–2 day upgrade to speed Layer‑2 adoption

source-logo  en.cryptonomist.ch 05 November 2025 09:37, UTC
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Recent proposals seek to shorten rollup withdrawals for Stage 1 optimistic rollups to one0to0two days while keeping Stage 2 at seven days, aiming to improve Layer0 usability and reduce friction for traders and DeFi users.

Summary

Can shortening rollup withdrawals for Stage 1 optimistic rollups improve Layer0 usability?

Cutting withdrawal times from seven days to one0to0two days would materially reduce capital lockup and make Layer0 products more attractive for everyday use. According to Cointelegraph, the proposal, attributed to Vitalik Buterin, targets Stage 1 rollups specifically while keeping Stage 2 conservative for stronger finality guarantees.

Advocates say a shorter window lowers reliance on custodial bridges and improves UX; critics warn it shrinks the time available to submit fraud proofs. This optimistic rollup update therefore focuses on operational changes that preserve the dispute model while shortening user wait times.

How can an optimistic rollup update preserve stage 2 rollup security?

What does the stage 1 rollup guide recommend for rollup withdrawals?

Practical recommendations emphasise tuning challenge windows for routine transfers, increasing incentives for independent watchers, and phasing changes through testnets. The stage 1 rollup guide approach preserves core fraud0proof mechanics while allowing faster exits for low0risk actions.

Will proof aggregation and tooling help?

Longer0term solutions mention proof aggregation and improved tooling to batch disputes and reduce on0chain costs, ideas found in broader ethereum rollup guide discussions. Those cryptographic and operational upgrades could enable faster cross0L2 movement without weakening settlement guarantees.

Technically, a one0to0two day window shifts pressure onto sequencers and watchers and requires coordinated client and operator upgrades. As Vitalik explained in “An Incomplete Guide to Rollups” (5 January 2021), “The contract starts a challenge period, during which anyone can try to use other Merkle branches to invalidate the exit,”. That principle underpins why Stage 2 should retain longer delays while Stage 1 experiments with faster exits.

Any timetable will depend on community review, audits and phased testing before mainnet parameter changes are adopted.

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